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Time to restore your wooden floors in Old Street
Blake, Bunyan, Defoe, Milton... How fitting to have four of our feistiest writers at rest in the same place: the burial ground at Bunhill Fields. It’s equally fitting for your natural wooden floors to do a sterling job of resisting pressure from careless feet - and playing their vital part in your property. But only if they are kept up to scratch - by getting rid of the scratches... Make sure of this happy state of affairs by bringing in the experts for repair and restoration:
The Old Street Floor Sanding Experts
Don’t think you floor is too old or too scruffy/marked/damaged to benefit. Whether it’s in your office, restaurant, bar, shop or home, just see what we can do.. Offer the best advice from our twenty years’ experience in the business: of restoring every kind of floor - from solid or engineered wooden boards to parquet blocks. Provide the complete service for your floors’ needs: repairs to damaged boards and blocks replacement with new or reclaimed timber sanding away old sealant and paint staining for a new colour resealing with oil, hard wax or lacquer for fresh and long lasting protection.
Using only top quality products: Making a great investment that offers superb value. And... with minimal mess and disruption: from 99% dust free sanding.
So choose a friendly, family firm who’ve restored hundreds of floors. Join the satisfied list. Ask us for your FREE assessment today From the Old Street Floor Sanding Experts. |
TRUSTED BY THESE WELL KNOWN BRANDS AND HUNDREDS MORE.
Wesley’s House is a plain, three bay property of around 1770 - where John, the founder of Methodism, lived out his life, dying here in 1791. Opposite, one enters the former ‘Bone Hill’, the main resting place of London nonconformists between 1695 and 1852. Defoe died to the south in Ropewalkers Row in 1731, while Milton lived the last twelve years of his life in Bushel Row, where he died in 1674. A rich and productive period for the great poet - where he finished ‘Paradise Lost’ and wrote ‘Paradise Regained’. As for William Blake, he wasn’t concerned where he was buried, but as his mother, aunt and brother lay here, he joined them in 1827. |